EverydayNile: Connecting Nile citizens through everyday stories

Through images and storytelling, EverydayNile brings together voices from across the basin to reflect on the river, the people it sustains, and the challenges they face. Curator Roger Anis shares what these stories reveal – and why they matter.
  • Roger Anis
  • November 6th, 2024
EverydayNile: Connecting Nile citizens through everyday stories
Photo: FOTEA

Curators Note

Three years ago, EverydayNile began as a simple idea – to exchange our stories of the Nile, to see it from different places and perspectives. We aimed to open our minds as citizens of the Nile Basin before seeing ourselves as photographers or storytellers. Since then, the world has faced numerous challenges, from the COVID-19 pandemic to wars and economic crises. However, despite these challenges, we continued to explore and reimagine the Nile.

EverydayNile was founded with the goal of empowering Nile citizens to share their stories about the river and water from their own countries. Although most of our programme took place online, a less-than-ideal method of communication, the visuals, pictures, and stories succeeded in connecting us. Each session became an opportunity to listen to the voices of participants telling stories from their communities, to witness their struggles and triumphs. Personally, I have been consistently amazed by how diverse the topography and geography of water is across the Nile basin.

Through images, we can create a broader narrative about the Nile – one that spans biodiversity, environmental issues, social dynamics, and the political situations faced by its citizens. Everything is connected; nothing works in isolation. The challenges we face can either halt us in our tracks or become the driving force behind new solutions. I have often found that challenges inspire creativity, especially when working with and around water. Like water, we must be fluid and flexible, adapting to tell our stories in any way we can.


Selected EverydayNile Stories:

  • Saving Lake Hawassa from distress
    Ethiopia’s Lake Hawassa, once a thriving ecosystem, now struggles with pollution, siltation, and deforestation. Local efforts to clean the lake and restore its surrounding lands offer hope for a healthier future.
  • Burullus Lake: A paradise under threat?
    Since becoming a Ramsar protected area in 1998, Burullus Lake has supported a rich ecosystem of migratory and resident birds, fish, and other wildlife. However, human activity now threatens this ecological sanctuary.
  • From hippo attack to new hope: Antoine Mukeshimana’s journey
    After surviving a life-altering hippo attack, Antoine Mukeshimana and his family were relocated from Sharita Island to Rwanda’s Rweru Model Village, where access to essentials like clean water and healthcare has brought them a fresh start.
  • Tracing the White Nile: Exploring Rutovu’s claim
    In East Africa’s highlands, Rutovu, Burundi, holds one of the recognised claims to the source of the Nile. This photo story captures the landscapes, history, and communities near this celebrated origin.
  • Following dragonflies: A journey along Sudan’s Nile
    Esra Elfaki has spent over a decade documenting dragonflies and damselflies along Sudan’s Nile, exploring how these insects reflect the region’s natural beauty and challenges.
  • The water crisis amidst conflict in Nyiragongo
    Violent conflict in Rutshuru territory, Democratic Republic of Congo, has intensified the water crisis for thousands forced to flee, leaving communities struggling to access essential resources.
  • The hands that carry Masese
    On the shores of Lake Victoria, the Masese landing site in Uganda bustles with activity, driven by the porters’ quiet, persistent efforts. Yet, beneath the surface of this vital economic hub lies a story of struggle, danger, and resilience.
  • River Kuja: A source of life and risk for Wath Ong’er
    In western Kenya, River Kuja is vital for people, plants, and wildlife. Yet, pollution and flooding present significant risks to the community.
  • Shifting tides: Juba and the Nile’s role in daily life
    The Nile River has shaped life for generations in Juba, South Sudan. From riverside gatherings in the 1950s to today’s water distribution challenges, the city’s residents have adapted their relationship with the river as it remains essential to survival, tradition, and progress.
  • Sewage struggles in Mwanza City: Survival amidst waste
    Managing sewage and sanitation is a daily challenge in Mwanza City, Tanzania, where steep hills shape unplanned neighbourhoods. This photo story explores how residents cope with waste management difficulties and highlights recent steps towards improvement.


The stories that emerged during this cycle, as well as in previous ones, reflect the difficulties participants encountered – from displacement caused by war, to safety and security concerns, to vast distances between us. And yet, despite all this, we managed to share these stories, each one a small piece in a much larger mosaic. When you step back and view the whole, a new picture of the Nile emerges – a personal, vulnerable Nile that is not just one long river but a system of lakes, lands, and communities.

Can storytelling make a difference in a Nile burdened by so many problems? I believe it can. Stories help us map the Nile, revealing what we have, what we lack, and how we use – and abuse – this critical resource. They help us understand the relationship between a natural resource that sustains millions and the people who rely on it. Stories can inspire action, especially in a time of great danger caused by climate change, political tensions, and conflict. These narratives will stand as witnesses to what is, what was, and what could be.

The EverydayNile exhibition at Nommo Gallery in Uganda brought together photographers from ten Nile Basin countries to share visual stories of life, nature, and biodiversity along the river. Video: FOTEA

In many of the sessions, listening to the stories and seeing the images left me reflecting on how little we know about what we all share. That’s why I believe so deeply in the power of storytelling – not just as a means of self-expression, but as a tool to educate, inform, and expand our understanding of the world around us. In EverydayNile, we have collectively pieced together a mosaic – a larger picture of the Nile, a living album of stories about the river and the environment it nurtures.


EverydayNile is supported by by Media in Cooperation and Transition (MiCT), InfoNile and FOTEA with funding from the IHE-Delft Water and Development Partnership Programme and JRS Biodiversity Foundation. It is part of the initiative “The Niles: Strengthening Media Capacities and Networks in the Nile Basin”, supported by the Deutsche Gesellschaft für Internationale Zusammenarbeit (GIZ) and commissioned by the German Federal Foreign Office (AA). The views expressed in this publication do not necessarily reflect those of GIZ, the German Federal Foreign Office, or MiCT.